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THE OFFICI A L STUDENT PUBLICATION OF THE ATENEO DE M A NIL A UNI V ERSIT Y
JANUARY-FEBRUARY 2021
DEEPER INTO THE TRUTH
VOL. XCI NO. 4
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IN SOLIDARITY AND STRENGTH. Ateneans stand together as they remain steadfast in demanding accountability from the Duterte administration due to its lapses in handling the recent typhoons and the COVID-19 pandemic. PHOTO BY NATE BOSANO
Ateneans continue academic strike into the second semester BY JILLIAN LOPEZ AND ANNA PINEDA
MONTHS AFTER the release of the Ateneo student strike manifesto in November 2020, various Loyola Schools (LS) students continue their academicstriketoprotestthenational government’s poor response to crises and the COVID-19 pandemic. Organized by Elise Ofilada (3 BFA CW), Bernardine De Belen (3 BFA CW), Angela Cole (3 BFA CW), Maria Larga (3 BFA CW), and Patricia Fermin (3 BFA ID), One Big Strike (OBS) calls on the national government to take accountability for its “criminal negligence” towards recent typhoons and the pandemic. Ofilada said that their second semester plans for the strike are underway following the success of two town hall meetings, where they discussed the first semester’s online learning difficulties with LS students and professors last January 18 and 20, respectively. As of press time, the OBS has asked the administration for a public discussion on the issue through an open letter to Vice President for the Loyola Schools Maria Luz Vilches, PhD and University President Roberto Yap, SJ.
petition for a mass student strike. OBS then published a more nuanced petition, which the Sanggunian denied to endorse with a 7-2 vote after an LS-wide constituency check. However, the Office of the Associate Dean for Student Formation (OA DSF), OBS organizers, and representatives of alumni and the Sanggunian released a joint statement on plans for the mass student strike and its campus mobilizations. The OBS
STRIKERS’ EXPERIENCES Prior to the town hall meetings, 581 Ateneans co-signed the initial
SPORTS
Cancellation of UAAP Season 83
organizers said that this prompted them to create a manifesto based on research regarding national issues and feedback from the LS community. The OBS initiators shared that the flooding in Cagayan was the “breaking point” that led to the strike. “We can’t keep pretending that things are normal, and we can’t keep on doing our modules as if things are okay because obviously they’re not,” De Belen said.
We can’t keep pretending that things are normal, and we can’t keep on doing our modules as if things are okay because obviously they’re not.
Acclimating to a wilting world
Sanggu to fully launch BluePrint for Socio-Political Engagement BY ELLY ADLAWAN AND BILLIE ASUNCION
INTERIM SANGGUNIAN President Jb Bejarin announced on November 30 the creation of the BluePrint for SocioPolitical Engagement, an initiative that plans to prepare Loyola Schools (LS) students for the 2022 national elections. The BluePrint is a document that outlines the Sanggunian’s proposed action plan to “actualize grassroots socio-political engagement” in
the University by 2022. While the document in its current form is accessible now, it is set to re-launch in February after it is edited based on feedback from the student body. While the BluePrint was announced after a series of Central Assembly meetings regarding the student-led strike, Bejarin clarified that the BluePrint was not created entirely as a response to said strike. He stated that the strike only guided the Sanggunian towards creating the BluePrint, but launching an SANGGU TO LAUNCH BLUEPRINT › 3
PHOTO BY ZOEY IGNACIO
ADDRESSING CONCERNS In relation to the Sanggunian’s non-endorsement of the petition, Interim Sanggunian Vice President
BERNARDINE DE BELEN ONE BIG STRIKE ORGANIZER
FEATURES
Ofilada added that joining the strike was an “extensive experience,” as strikers requested for class withdrawals in order to “immerse with people who are left behind by the systems.” De Belen also said that their professors continued to converse with them about how they can support the movement as faculty members. However, Ofilada noted that the strikers still faced challenges in organizing the initiative and maintaining the community’s engagement, particularly because the online setup restricted student interactions and connections. Despite this, the strikers still believed that the mass academic strike was a success because it inspired other schools to start their own strike and participate in relief operations. “It’s already successful [when] students [decided to] join the strike. [...] Nakikita natin kung paano nagmamanifest kung ano ‘yung inaaral sa University, na we stand up for things that we believe in,” De Belen said. (We saw how the University’s principles manifested [to the students], which is standing up for things that we believe in.)
ATENEANS CONTINUE STRIKE › 3
BEYOND LOYOLA
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INQUIRY
OPINION
Confined potential
Delayed and denied